'Water Ghosts' Blurs Lines Between History and Fiction

Shawna Yang Ryan, author of Water Ghosts, in San Francisco on August 10, 2010. (Asia Society Northern California)

SAN FRANCISCO, August 10, 2010 - Speaking before the Asia Society Northern California at the Chinese Historical Society of America, Shawna Yang Ryan, author of the critically acclaimed novel Water Ghosts, shared insights into how Chinese-American history and fiction become intertwined in her writing.

Ryan began by showing the parallels between her own family history and the characters in the novel, revealing that in both cases the political situation changed lives in dramatic and surprising ways.

While doing the research for her novel, Ryan uncovered the history of her grandmother's wedding, a lavish affair paid for by her great-grandfather. Ostensibly an act of generosity, it was also motivated, Ryan found, by a sense of immense guilt. As she described, her great-grandfather had been in San Francisco during the Sino-Japanese War in the 1930s while her great-grandmother's family fled to Fujian. Assuming his family had perished, her great-grandfather remarried and went on with his life for the next decade. But a chance encounter with an old acquaintance revealed that his wife and children had survived the war. A reunion with his estranged family spurred the spending spree for his daughter's wedding.

Ryan used this as an example of how outside political forces had a tremendous impact on individual lives. And this was no less true for early Chinese immigrants to the US. "As free as America liked to see itself, and as loudly as it called to the world to give over ‘your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free,'" Ryan observed, "in truth America had a very defined view of what the American population should look like. And they had a very confused idea of how to achieve that."

A string of xenophobic laws against Chinese immigrants to the US in the 19th and early 20th centuries created a population of many Chinese men but few women. This prevented Chinese immigrants from having children entitled to citizenship by birth, ensuring their status as guest workers (American women who married foreigners also lost their US citizenship). Because these Chinese laborers had no children to support or wives to come home to, employers could keep their working hours longer and wages lower.

The ban on Chinese women also turned prostitution into a huge underground racket. Chinese women, now immensely profitable as sex workers, were often tricked or sold into servitude in the US. To circumvent strict immigration policies against Chinese women, they passed through customs by memorizing fake biographies, impersonating wives or daughters of legitimate merchants, or even being hidden in crates. Once landed, the women were brought to brothels (often little more than hovels) throughout San Francisco and the Bay Area, where they worked until they had paid off their debt or, more frequently, died.

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